The change in an object's motion, is simply force.
The object cannot change motion unless acted upon by an outside force. For example: If I throw a Baseball, it will never stop unless acted upon by gravity (or the outside force). Or the outside force could be it smacking into a wall or your friends head.
Change in motion is called force. The resistance to change in motion is known as inertia. The common changes in motion are acceleration and stopping.
The rate of change of motion is called jerk, jolt, surge, or lurch. The rate of change is derivative of motion with respect to time, velocity, and/or position.
well the formula for change in speed is: velocity= change in time / change in distance so i believe that would be the same formula for change in motion.
There is not a name for a change in motion. A change in motion is caused by a new force acting upon an object.
its called kinetic energy
anything still is potential energy
Kinetic energy.
Inertia
um I think it is speed
A change in speed or direction is caused by a force and is called acceleration.
The reluctance of a body to change its state of motion is termed inertia. The mass associated with this property is called its inertial mass, notably different from gravitational mass, which is responsible for objects with mass experiencing an attractive force between them. The inertial rest mass of an object is what gives it momentum.
Weight
inertia. the more mass an object has, the greater its inertia. what do you call it when an object refuses a object in motion?
Motion is the change of position over time. The rate of change of position is called or speed. Speed combined with its direction is called velocity. The rate of change of velocity is called acceleration. So, motion in which the speed or direction are changing is accelerated motion. The question uses the word cause, which may be confusing. Technically when a force is applied to a mass, there is acceleration. When there is acceleration the velocity changes. If the object was in motion to begin with, it would speed up or slow down or change direction. If the object was at rest, the force would have caused an increase in speed from zero, so it would start moving. Therefore if you think of a causal relationship, it would be more proper to say force causes acceleration, which IS a change in motion. For an example, an easy one is your bicycle. If you pedal, you are applying force. That force cause the bicycle's speed to increase ... acceleration ... and you are in motion. If you apply more force, you will go faster. If you apply the brakes, you will slow down which is also acceleration (because speed is changing). There is only one way to have motion without acceleration and that is to travel at a constant velocity ... constant speed in a straight line. In practice, there is no motion without acceleration for any period of time, because there is always some minute change in speed or direction.
Inertia
Inertia
I think this question is not phrased very well. Any force can change objects velocity (speed+direction). If fact that is the definition of the force - F=ma any force, by definition itself, can change objects velocity. Maybe you meant what force can change objects direction of motion? In that case - any force that has a different direction (not the same as direction of motion) Any force can change an object's motion.
Any net force
Motion is change of position. but remember both must always be related to some 'datum' position or state of motion.
Gravity provides a force; any net force will result in an acceleration, i.e., a change of motion.
Any object on which an unbalance force is acting will accelerate - i.e., its velocity will change.
Inertia is the tendency that all objects resist a change in motion
force
Inertia."Objects in motion tend to stay in motion, and objects at rest tend to stay at rest, unless acted on by an outside force."That is a wording of Newton's first law of motion, also known as the law of intertia.
Inertia."Objects in motion tend to stay in motion, and objects at rest tend to stay at rest, unless acted on by an outside force."That is a wording of Newton's first law of motion, also known as the law of intertia.
Mass.